Fulacht fia, Ballyveelick, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Settlement Sites
In a tilled field at Ballyveelick in north Cork, a spread of burnt material stretching thirteen metres from north to south marks what was once a fulacht fia, one of the most common yet persistently puzzling monument types in the Irish archaeological landscape.
A fulacht fia is, in essence, a prehistoric cooking site, typically consisting of a mound of fire-cracked stones accumulated beside a trough or pit. The process involved heating stones in a fire and dropping them into a water-filled trough to bring it to the boil, a practical if laborious method that left behind distinctive spreads of shattered, heat-reddened stone. Thousands of these sites survive across Ireland, the majority dating to the Bronze Age, roughly 2000 to 500 BC, though some are earlier or later.
The Ballyveelick example survives in agricultural ground, its burnt spread still legible at the surface despite the pressures of cultivation. That a deposit of this kind endures in active tillage at all is quietly remarkable. The sheer number of fulacht fia sites recorded across Munster suggests they were a routine feature of the prehistoric landscape, probably used seasonally, and the burnt stone mounds that survive elsewhere often cluster near streams or low-lying ground where water was readily available. What drove their use at any particular location, and by whom, generally remains beyond recovery.